Posted on Nov 6, 2023
Indictments Haven’t Sunk Trump, but a Conviction Might
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Posted 7 mo ago
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Any conviction, if they happen, will likely be successfully appealed.
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SPC Carl Davis
Then in three months jury selection in the federal trail begins. Just in time for the GOP primary voting in March
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SPC Carl Davis
Maj Kevin "Mac" McLaughlin Jack Smith has surely calculated and anticipated that possibly.
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Maj Kevin "Mac" McLaughlin
SPC Carl Davis Which only demonstrates this is being done purely as a planned attempt to circumvent the election process, not to enforce the law.
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SPC Carl Davis
..."For former President Donald Trump, a new set of New York Times/Siena College polls captures a stunning, seemingly contradictory picture.
His 91 felony charges in four different jurisdictions have not significantly hurt him among voters in battleground states. Yet he remains weaker than at least one of his Republican rivals, and if he’s convicted and sentenced in any of his cases, some voters appear ready to turn on him — to the point where he could lose the 2024 election.
Trump leads President Joe Biden in five key battleground states — Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada and Pennsylvania, according to the Times/Siena polls. He has eaten significantly into Biden’s advantages among younger, Black and Hispanic voters, many of whom retain positive views of the policies Trump enacted as president. And Trump appears to have room to grow, as more voters say they are open to supporting the former president than they are to backing Biden, with large shares of voters saying they trust Trump on the economy and national security.
But the results reveal the complex way voters continue to view Trump, his presidency and his legal problems."...
..."For former President Donald Trump, a new set of New York Times/Siena College polls captures a stunning, seemingly contradictory picture.
His 91 felony charges in four different jurisdictions have not significantly hurt him among voters in battleground states. Yet he remains weaker than at least one of his Republican rivals, and if he’s convicted and sentenced in any of his cases, some voters appear ready to turn on him — to the point where he could lose the 2024 election.
Trump leads President Joe Biden in five key battleground states — Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada and Pennsylvania, according to the Times/Siena polls. He has eaten significantly into Biden’s advantages among younger, Black and Hispanic voters, many of whom retain positive views of the policies Trump enacted as president. And Trump appears to have room to grow, as more voters say they are open to supporting the former president than they are to backing Biden, with large shares of voters saying they trust Trump on the economy and national security.
But the results reveal the complex way voters continue to view Trump, his presidency and his legal problems."...
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